Army Distaff Foundation Magician — Performing at Knollwood’s Annual Gala
Working as the Army Distaff Foundation magician was one of the bookings I think about most. On November 1, 2024, I performed at the Foundation’s annual event at Knollwood — the military life-plan community on Oregon Avenue in Washington, D.C. — and walked out of the building thinking about service in a way I hadn’t before.
About the Event
The Army Distaff Foundation operates Knollwood, a residential community in Washington, D.C. that serves retired military officers and their families. The annual event brings together residents, families, board members, and supporters. It’s not a corporate gala. It’s not a Vegas show. It’s a thank-you, organized by people who have spent careers thanking the men and women in the room.
The booking came in through Gotham Artists agency, with William “Will” Campbell — Communications & Events Manager at the Foundation — running point on the client side. (We also worked with James Michels at the Foundation and AJ at Gotham on the contracting side.) Will navigated the agreement while his wife was within days of having their first child. That kind of grace under load tells you how the Foundation operates.
My Role at the Event
I performed a stand-up parlor show for the event — a 30-to-40-minute set built specifically for a multi-generational, veteran-and-family audience. The customizations leaned into respect, not patriotism-as-performance: callbacks to service without trading on it, material that worked just as well for the great-grandchildren in the room as for the retired colonels. A couple of the closing pieces were rebuilt for this audience specifically.
The Army Distaff Foundation magician booking isn’t a stop on a comedy circuit — it’s a privilege.
Why Hire a Mentalist?
If you’re producing an event for a military, veteran, or retirement-community audience, here’s what the performer needs to bring:
- Reverence without solemnity. The room earned its laughter. The performer’s job is to deliver it without making the audience the prop.
- Multi-generational material. Kids in the front, grandparents in the back. The set has to land for both without insulting either.
- Audio that respects hearing-aid wearers. This is a technical note that performers regularly miss. Mic placement, mid-range projection, and pacing all matter more than they do in a standard corporate room.
- Familiarity with service culture. You don’t need to be a veteran. You need to have shown up.
- Time discipline. Knollwood runs on a schedule. Be exact.
Client Feedback
[TESTIMONIAL PLACEHOLDER — Will Campbell, Communications & Events Manager, Army Distaff Foundation. Note: Will reached out in fall 2025 to schedule a recap call about the event experience, which is a strong indicator of a positive outcome.]
Takeaways
A few things I’m carrying forward from being the Army Distaff Foundation magician at Knollwood:
- Build the show for the audience, not the room. Knollwood is a beautiful venue, but the performance was built for the people in it, not the chandeliers.
- Slow down. Veteran audiences reward presence over pace. The biggest reactions came in the spaces between the lines, not inside them.
- Honor the planner. Will was navigating a baby due any day and still ran a tight event. That deserves match-the-effort professionalism on the artist side.
- Don’t perform service. Just show up to it. The biggest mistake an entertainer can make at a military event is making the night about how much they respect the audience. Just be excellent, and let the respect show through the work.
Book Me for Your Next Event
If you’re producing an event for a military community, veterans’ organization, or retirement community and you want a show that respects the room without lecturing it, use the form below and tell me about your event. I’ll be in touch.

